Your coach/teacher is an amazing improvisor. Be an amazing improvisor just like them. Don’t improvise like them.
I recently had a truncated version of this conversation with a teammate. It followed a session where we spent a lot of time talk about what our coach would have done in a scene and in an entire harold. He told us what he would have done, and it would have been great scene work and a great harold, no doubt. Having said that, I don’t think I care what he would have done.
An improvisor is an individual. Your life experience informs your openings, your scene work, your object work, and just about everything you do on an improv stage. The reason I don’t care what my coach would have done is that I can NEVER do the scenes that he would do. My life experience is different than his completely and while his informs good scene work, mine life experience should inform my own good scene work.
A coach should note choices, acting decisions, object work, staging, and whole bunch more stuff. Saying that he would have done a military scene based on his time in ROTC is not a valuable note. I know nothing about ROTC, I don’t even know what it stands for. So telling me he would have done that makes me feel stupid, and if in the future I find myself in a similar situation, and I try to do an ROTC scene, there’s a good chance I’m gonna fall flat on my face because I seriously don’t know what ROTC stands for (I’ll Google it later). Saying that it would have been a better choice to rest the game because we hit the pattern too many times and it wasn’t funny anymore is helpful.
That’s not to say you couldn’t do a scene that your coach would have done. Maybe you have the background to do an hour long monoscene all about ROTC, that’s impressive. You can do anything, that’s the beauty of improv. But, what’s even more beautiful about improv is that no matter what everyone on your team is working to make your decision right.
In my early improv life I found myself wishing I could do scenes just like some of my favorite improvisors. I even tried to steer some scenes in the direction of things that I had seen work, and it always failed. Now I find myself admiring their acting, their tags, their object work. Now I try to make MY move with better acting, tagging, and object work.
I love my coaches and teachers, and they make great choices based on their life experience. Becoming a great improvisor is about using your life, and making great choices from that. If the suggestion Shoe Box wouldn’t prompt you to do a scene about loving The Barenaked Ladies (yes, I would do that) because you don’t know who they are, then more power to you, what choice would you have done? Great, that’s perfect. Now, ask your brilliant coach how to make that choice better.
Disagree? Think I’m a genius? Know what ROTC means? Leave me a comment, and we’ll figure it out.